MIDDLETON
Mideltun, Middeltun (xi cent.).
The parish was composed in 1831 of the townships
of Aislaby, Cawthorn, Cropton, Hartoft, Lockton,
Middleton, Rosedale Eastside and Wrelton, of which
Cropton, Lockton and Rosedale were chapelries. (fn. 1)
Rosedale Westside is in the parish of Lastingham,
divided from Rosedale Eastside, in which the chapel
stands, by a brook. (fn. 2)
The area of the parish is 27,934 acres, of which,
excluding Lockton, (fn. 3) 4,364 acres are arable, 5,290
permanent grass and 519 woodland. (fn. 4) Now principally moorland, (fn. 5) there were once extensive woods.
In 1086 the wood of Cawthorn and Cropton was
3 leagues long by 1 league wide, that of Wrelton
3 furlongs long. (fn. 6) In 1334 Hartoft and Stainehowecliff Woods were appurtenant to all the townships in the parish except Lockton, to which Horcombe and Crossdale Woods belonged; Risebrough
Wood was appurtenant to Cropton township. (fn. 7) The
surveyors of 1538 said that timber could be obtained
from Cropton for the repair of Pickering Castle. (fn. 8)
The subsoil is Corallian Beds, Kimmeridge and
Oxford Clay, Middle and Upper Lias, the soil lime,
redstone, loam, peat, clay, sand, gravel. Wheat, barley,
oats, turnips and peas are grown and horse and cattle
breeding is a great industry. King John confirmed
to Rosedale Priory the grant of Eustace de Stuteville
of the site of his forge in Bagthwaite on condition
that it was removed and never rebuilt. (fn. 9) In 1583
there were a coal mine and quarries of coarse stone
and ironstone in the wood called Cropton Spiers in
the demesne and waste lands of Cropton, the vein
of coal being 6½ ft. in thickness. The profits were
40s. yearly. (fn. 10) The name Coal Pit Rigg is now
found in Hartoft. Gravel and stone were once
worked at Lockton and there are ironstone mines on
Rosedale Moor, a vein of great richness having been
discovered some years ago, but being now nearly
exhausted. Jet, alum shale, cement stones and excellent freestone are found in Rosedale, as well as coal,
which, however, is no longer worked. In 1334 the
Prioress of Rosedale was said to have made an
inclosure twenty years before in Clot Park, and new
inclosures in Brownthwaite and Pesewra in Rosedale,
all parcel of the township of Cropton. (fn. 11) In 1580
William Horsley was alleged to have inclosed four
intakes in Cropton Manor and William Metham to
have made three intakes in Staindale and Haulesike
End in his manor of Lockton. (fn. 12) An inquiry was
held in 1597 as to whether closes called Farwath,
Michelhead and Saltergate Bothome had been taken
from the commons of Lockton or the Queen's common
in Pickering Forest. (fn. 13) In 1676 a dispute arose about
the tithe of cherries from Cherry Garth, a very
ancient inclosure in Middleton; at the inquiry in
the following spring reference was made to the
general inclosure of the township of Lockton in
1676. (fn. 14) An inclosure award was made for Lockton
in 1784, (fn. 15) and Lockton Low Moor and Saltergate
Moor were inclosed by award of 1872. (fn. 16)
West Gill and North Gill rise over 1,300 ft. above
the ordnance datum, unite to form Northdale Beck,
and join the River Seven at Rosedale Abbey; within
the triangle thus formed lie the conventual ruins, now
converted into barns and cottages, the abbey church,
rebuilt in 1894, and the mill in the grounds. (fn. 17) 'The
capital messuage, priory or mansion-house, known as
the manor-house' of Rosedale had in 1649 'several
lower and upper rooms very ancient and decayed.' (fn. 18)
The village is built along the road from Pickering
to Cropton, with back lanes to North and South
Middleton. It contains a few old cottages, the post
office being an example of a type fast disappearing in
the district. It is now divided into two floors and
otherwise altered, but the main timbers are intact.
The roof is supported on heavy curved principals
carried down to the floor and evidently originally
open to the ridge.
Middleton Hall is a stone-fronted Georgian building
with a balustraded parapet. Eustace de Stutevill held
the capital messuage of Middleton in demesne in the
early 13th century, (fn. 19) and in 1246 his successor Joan
widow of Hugh Wake and wife of Hugh Bigod
granted it to Rosedale Priory. (fn. 20) There was no
capital messuage attached to the manor in 1349. (fn. 21)
The church lies down a lane in the north of the
village, opposite being a field known as Nun's Garth.
North-west of Middleton is Cropton. The village
is of some size and stands 500 ft. high on the moors,
the ground sloping towards the west. It is built
about lanes which curve from one another and again
meet at the north end of the village where stands the
church. A short distance to the west of the church
on Hall Garth Hill is the site of Cropton Castle. The
earthworks are of the early keep and bailey type, the
circular keep mound being on the west side, with an
extensive moated inclosure adjoining it on the east.
Within the latter are the well-defined foundation
mounds of the domestic buildings, including the
rectangular great hall with smaller apartments at
either end. The mound commands a magnificent
view over the surrounding country to the west, north
and south. Cropton Castle, the head of the Wake
'barony of Middleton,' is mentioned in 1334. (fn. 22) It
was in ruins in 1349. (fn. 23) William Horsley, who died
seised of the manor in 1609, held a messuage called
the 'Hall House.' (fn. 24) The church of St. Gregory,
erected in 1840, is close by Hall Garth Hill at the
end of Church Lane. An offender was sentenced to
be set in the stocks in the chapel yard at Cropton
in 1613. (fn. 25) William Scoresby, the Arctic navigator
(1760–1829), was son of a small farmer at Cropton,
and his son William, master mariner, clergyman and
writer, was born there in 1789. (fn. 26)
In the northern extremity of this township stands
Keldy Castle, the residence of Mr. P. B. Reckitt. It
is an extensive modern castellated building.
Cawthorn stands to the east of Cropton. It has
earthworks on a hill in the line of the Roman road
that may in places be traced between Dunsley and
York. (fn. 27) The site is now covered with the larch and
fir trees planted by the father of Mr. James M.
Mitchelson, the present owner of the manor. Other
earthworks can be traced both on the east and west
of West Moor Road. At Bibo House, a farm near
Cawthorn, Roman foundations have been discovered.
Cawthorn had a capital messuage in the 16th century. (fn. 28)
Lockton faces Levisham across Levisham Beck.
The village is picturesque and stands on an elevated
site. The church stands between two roads which
meet at either end of the village, the houses being
mostly of stone with tiled roofs. On the south side
of the main street in a railed in space is a disused
well with the following inscription on an adjoining
house: 'This well was founded in 1697 at the
charges of Robart Merrey, John Robinson, Edward
Thornhill, Robart Richinson, Robart Harrisson,
James Wamsley, William P o . . d.' The manorhouse is mentioned in 1554–5. (fn. 29)
Half a mile west of Middleton along the high road
is a small hamlet of Aislaby. On the south side of
the road is the Hall, a mid-18th-century building
with piers in front supporting four lead statues of
Eros, Hermes, Athene and Aries. Adjoining is a
large walled garden with a square summer-house at
the north-east angle.
Still further west is the hamlet of Wrelton, built
round a green. It contains several thatched cottages
and one on the Kirkby Moorside road dated 1665.
The Hall is an unpretentious building of no great
age on the north side of the street.
Local names in Rosedale in 1538 and 1570–1 include: Ellerker, Angrove, Harchill, Lathgarth, Bromefeld, Bromehede, Kilnegarth, Kirkegarth, Hermit's
Holme, Cotehill, Yeowe Ing, Angarham, Bothom
Close, Errington Thwayte (fn. 30) ; in 1649 Batlingbrighill (fn. 31) is found. The boundaries of the 'barony of
Middleton' have been printed. (fn. 32)
There are Wesleyan chapels at Middleton, Cropton
(erected 1897), Rosedale and Wrelton; Primitive
Methodist chapels in the same places and at Hartoft.
Public elementary schools were erected at Middleton
in 1884, at Cropton in 1874, at Hartoft in 1876,
at Lockton in 1879, at Rosedale in 1822, and at
Wrelton in 1843.
Manors
In 1086 5 carucates at MIDDLETON were soke of the 'manor' of
Pickering. (fn. 33) The manor was subsequently
held not of Pickering Castle (fn. 34) but in chief; the two
water-mills, however, belonged to the honour, (fn. 35) and
the tenants of Middleton, Cawthorn and Wrelton
from the 13th to the 17th century paid a commutation to the lord of Pickering for 'water-boones' (fn. 36) and
in 1651 for boon days in harvest. (fn. 37) Middleton and
Aislaby formed part of the honour of Rosedale (fn. 38)
and descended with it until the 15th century. In
1619–21 it was doubtful who was the owner; the
lord of Cropton claimed Middleton, Aislaby and
Wrelton as members of Cropton, but as they were
members of the honour of Pickering this was said to
be an intrusion on the possessions of Prince Charles,
then lord of Pickering. (fn. 39) In January 1712–13 the
owner of the manor of Cropton seems to have
possessed a good deal more land in Middleton than
did the Crown. (fn. 40) It now belongs, like Cropton, to
Mr. James Mitchelson Mitchelson.
The 4 carucates at AISLABY (Aslachebi, Aslachesbi, xi cent.; Aslakeby, Asalaceby, xiii-xv cent.;
Ayeslaby, xiii cent.) had been held by Gospatric as
one 'manor' before the Conquest and were in the
king's hands in 1086. (fn. 41) In 1166–7 Aislaby was
with Middleton in the hands of Baldwin Buelot; by
1260 it was in the fee of Wake, (fn. 42) and it afterwards
descended with Wrelton, (fn. 43) apparently as a member of
that manor.

Aislaby. Gules a fesse between three martlets argent.
A William de Aislaby held lands in Yorkshire in
1189–90. (fn. 44) Shortly afterwards Guy (de Aislaby) the
Hunter held 2 carucates at
Aislaby by the serjeanty of
training a hound for the
king. (fn. 45) His son Richard obtained the commutation of
the serjeanty by an annual
rent of 40s. to the service of
one-twentieth of a knight's
fee. (fn. 46) Richard died about
1261, leaving a son and heir
Richard. (fn. 47) The heirs of Arnald
de Aislaby held 7 oxgangs of
the fee in 1284–5 (fn. 48) ; it was
apparently still held by a descendant of the family, though
the Prior of Malton was in possession of 2 carucates,
in 1428. (fn. 49) Roger Marshall of Aislaby Grange, who
died in 1568 leaving a son and heir Roger, (fn. 50) married
Mary daughter of Thomas Curtes by Elizabeth
daughter of Francis Aislaby (fn. 51) of South Dalton. Ralph
eldest son of Francis left an only child Ursula, who
married Marmaduke Cholmley of Brandsby and died
childless. (fn. 52) The Marshalls held Wrelton, (fn. 53) and were
thus owners of the manor of Aislaby, but the 2 carucates formerly held by the Aislabys were probably
the lands 'late Cholmley's' for which in 1619–21 (fn. 54)
Thomas Chapman paid 40s. to the lord of Pickering.
A 'manor' and 1 carucate in CAWTHORN
(Caltorn, xi cent.; Calthorne, xiii–xvii cent.; Cawthorne, xvi cent. onwards) were held by Gospatric
before the Conquest; they were in the king's hands
in 1086 and were among the lands given to Robert
de Brus after the Domesday Survey was made. (fn. 55) In
1284–5 2 carucates here belonged to the fee of
Wake (fn. 56) ; it was still held as of the manor of Cropton
in 1577. (fn. 57)
In 1564 William Dobson died seised of the capital
messuage, leaving a son and heir Francis, (fn. 58) who died
seised of the same in 1577 and was succeeded by
his brother Roger. (fn. 59) Roger in 1578 conveyed the
'manor' of Cawthorn, of which this is the first
mention found, to Sir William Fairfax, kt., (fn. 60) who in
1588 conveyed it to William Horsley, sen., (fn. 61) of
Skirpenbeck. William Horsley and his sons William,
Richard and Francis (fn. 62) in 1604 conveyed the manor
to Ralph Thorpe, Robert Gere and Samuel Brasse, (fn. 63)
who in the following year obtained a similar grant
from William Dawnay and Julia his wife. (fn. 64) In 1607
Ralph Lord Eure, who married Mary daughter of
Sir John Dawnay of Sessay, (fn. 65) granted the manor in
fee to John Okeley, (fn. 66) probably in trust for Giles
Fenay. The manor of Cawthorn was settled in 1615
on Stephen Norcliffe and Elizabeth his wife, a granddaughter of Giles Fenay. (fn. 67) In 1620 Francis Fenay
and Priscilla his wife granted the 'manor' to Stephen
Norcliffe, (fn. 68) who died in January 1621–2 seised of
two-thirds, the widow of Giles Fenay holding the
remaining third. Stephen left two daughters, Elizabeth and Katharine. (fn. 69) Elizabeth married Sir James
Pennyman of Marske, Katharine Sir John Goodrick
of Ribstone. (fn. 70) In 1636 James Pennyman and Elizabeth conveyed the manor to Henry Fairfax of Oglethorpe (fn. 71) and Mary his wife, (fn. 72) and in 1650 Francis
Goodrick with Leonard Conyers, clerk, and Mary
his wife granted it to John Hill and his heirs and to
Ralph Yorke. (fn. 73) Mr. James Mitchelson Mitchelson is
the present owner.

Stutevill. Burelly argent and gules.
Before the Conquest Gospatric held a 'manor'
and 5 carucates in CROPTON (Croptun, xi cent.);
these were in the king's hands in 1086. (fn. 74) During
the 12th century it was a member of the honour of
Rosedale. (fn. 75) In the 15th century Cropton was said
to be a member of the Stutevills' manor of Cottingham. (fn. 76)
William de Stutevill was lord
of Kirkby Moorside (q.v.) in
1200. His brother Nicholas
had livery of all William's
lands in 1205–6. (fn. 77) Nicholas
held the six knights' fees of
Cottingham in 1210–12,
having apparently enfeoffed
his son Robert (fn. 78) of one
knight's fee in Middleton. (fn. 79)
Robert left a son Eustace, (fn. 80) to
whom his uncle Nicho'as assigned lands of Liddell in Cumberland until his
majority, giving the custody to William de Valoines,
who bequeathed it to the Earl of Winchester. The
earl on his death gave it to Roger his son and heir,
who was guardian in 1220. (fn. 81) Eustace died without
issue before 1246. His lands then reverted to Joan
daughter of his uncle Nicholas de Stutevill (fn. 82) and
wife of Hugh Bigod, who in that year held Cropton
and Middleton in demesne. (fn. 83) In 1282 the knight's
fee of Cropton and Middleton, the half fee of
Wrelton, Aislaby and Middleton, and one-eighth
fee of Wrelton were said to be parcel of the manor
of Kirkby Moorside (fn. 84) with which they descended (fn. 85)
and were divided between the heirs of Edmund
Earl of Kent in 1408. (fn. 86) Sir John Nevill died in
1423, before his father, leaving by Elizabeth a son
Ralph, afterwards second Earl of Westmorland. (fn. 87)
Edmund Earl of March, Henry Brounflete, who had
married Joan Duchess of York, and Thomas Earl of
Salisbury were her parceners when Elizabeth widow
of Sir John Nevill died in 1422–3. (fn. 88) Edmund died
seised in January 1424–5, and his heirs were Richard
afterwards Duke of York, son of his sister Anne, and
his half-sisters Joan wife of John (Grey) Earl of
Tankerville and Lord Powis (fn. 89) and Joyce wife of Sir
John Tiptoft, kt. (fn. 90) Henry Brounflete held 6½ carucates in Cropton, Middleton and Aislaby in 1428 (fn. 91)
in right of Joan, who died in 1434 seised of the
manor of Cropton and the reversion of its appurtenance the advowson of Middleton Church, her heirs
being Margaret Duchess of Clarence, Richard Duke
of York, Henry Grey (son of John and Joan), Joyce
wife of John Tiptoft, Alice Countess of Salisbury, and
Ralph Earl of Westmorland. (fn. 92) Henry Grey had a
son Richard Lord Powis, attainted in 1459 (fn. 93) ; the
Duke of York's lands merged in the Crown in March
1460–1. (fn. 94) John Tiptoft, created Earl of Worcester
in 1449, was attainted in 1470 (fn. 95) ; John only son of
the second Earl of Westmorland died in his father's
lifetime and John younger brother of the earl, slain at
Towton in 1461, was attainted. The earl's nephew,
Ralph son of John, thereupon became third earl and
obtained the restoration of the greater part of his
estates, (fn. 96) but not of Cottingham, (fn. 97) Cropton or Sheriff
Hutton (q.v.).

Nevill. Gules a saltire argent.

Tiptoft. Argent a saltire engrailed gules.
The custody of the vill and demesne of Cropton,
now called parcel of the lordship of Sheriff Hutton,
was early in 1489–90 granted by Henry VII to Roger
Bell (fn. 98) ; in 1500 the king granted the profits of the
courts, as part of the lordship of Pickering, to Sir
Richard Cholmley, his steward there, (fn. 99) but in the
same year the place is called 'a little town belonging
to Sheriff Hutton.' (fn. 100) William Horsley, yeoman of
the guard, had grants of the office of bailiff from 1514
and a lease of the manor in 1545, (fn. 101) and a William
Horsley was said in January 1579–80 to have made
inclosures. (fn. 102) Queen Elizabeth leased the manor in
1573 (fn. 103) ; in 1592 she granted it with other possessions
of 'Thomas Wake of Liddell' to the 'fishing grantees,'
William Tipper and Robert Dawe, their heirs and
assigns, (fn. 104) and in 1599–1600 conveyed it to Henry
Best and John Burges of London, their heirs and
assigns, as a 'possession of Richard, late Duke of York.' (fn. 105)
They apparently sold it to William Horsley, who died
seised in 1609, leaving a son and heir William, then
a middle-aged man. (fn. 106) In 1619–21 it was said to
belong to the dukedom of York and to have been
lately sold to one Horsley. (fn. 107) William Horsley was
concerned in settlements in 1634 (fn. 108) and 1682, (fn. 109) and in
1702 William Horsley, senior, and William Horsley,
junior, conveyed it to Thomas Robinson (fn. 110) of Thornton
Riseborough. (fn. 111) Gamekeepers were appointed for the
manor by the Robinsons until 1741. (fn. 112) Mr. T.
Mitchelson was in possession in 1859 (fn. 113) and Mr. James
Mitchelson Mitchelson of Pickering Hall is the present
owner.
In 1284–5 the lords of Cropton were said to have
had their courts and gallows and had amendment of
the assize of ale time out of mind. (fn. 114) They had the
right to strays found in the moors and woods, but
not in the arable land of this 'barony,' if taken before
the foresters of the lord of Pickering had made any
attachment. (fn. 115) Henry III granted Eustace de Stutevill right of chase at the king's pleasure, but Thomas
Wake had no free chase for fox, hare, wild cat and
badger as he claimed in 1338. (fn. 116) They held the
woods called Frith and Holtwaitbank, which were
outside the regard, and appointed a forester for them
and a woodward at Riseborough. In these woods
they had an aerie of sparrow-hawks and merlins, and
the right to bees, honey and millstones and turf,
bracken and heather for themselves and their tenants. (fn. 117)
Before the Conquest LOCKTON (Lochetun, xi
cent.; Lochintun, Lokinton, xii–xiii cent.), assessed as
5 carucates of land, was held by Ulchil as a 'manor';
it was in the king's hands in 1086. (fn. 118)
One of the several manors in the township descended
from 1252 with Levisham (fn. 119) (q.v.).
Another fee was held here by serjeanty by the
family of Boie (Boye), hereditary foresters. William
Boie and Alan (de Kingthorpe) (fn. 120) the Forester rendered account of the forest issues in 1165–6, (fn. 121) as did
William Boie and Alan son of Geoffrey (de Kingthorpe) in 1189–90. (fn. 122) An Alan Boie holding
3 carucates of land in Lockton by this service (fn. 123) had
forfeited his bailiwick in 1200, when he offered a
fine of 300 marks for its restoration. (fn. 124) Walter Boie
held these lands and was forester in fee in 1221–4. (fn. 125)
His brother William died childless, (fn. 126) and by 1245–6
the inheritance was in the hands of co-heirs, Ellen
wife of John de Thornton, Alice widow of Alan de
Bulmer and Agnes wife of John de Barkesworth. (fn. 127)
John de Thornton, as husband of the eldest co-heir,
held the 'serjeanty' of Lockton, only part of the land
being in demesne. (fn. 128) In 1318 John de Bulmer of
Wrelton quitclaimed to the lord of Pickering any
claim he might have in the forestership as great-grandson of Walter Boie and grandson of one of his daughters
and co-heirs, Helen mother of Roger de Wrelton, (fn. 129)
who also had been forester in fee. (fn. 130) The bailiwick
was restored with Lockton to Alan son of Roger de
Wrelton in 1321, (fn. 131) but was granted by the Earl of
Lancaster in the same year for life to John de Monmouth, (fn. 132) against whom Alan brought a suit in 1328. (fn. 133)
Alan paid the subsidy in Lockton in 1332–3. (fn. 134) He
recovered his office and granted it in fee to William de
Percehay, (fn. 135) who held the Levisham (q.v.) manor of
Lockton, with which this now merged. Lyon Percehay
at the end of the following century denied that he
owed the service of forester for his Lockton lands. (fn. 136)
Another manor in Lockton descended from the
Malcakes. Anscetil Malcake was living in the reign of
Henry II (fn. 137) and had a son Alan. (fn. 138) William and Geoffrey
Malcake held lands in Lockton in the time of Walter
Boie. (fn. 139) In the spring of 1240–1 and of 1249–50
Geoffrey granted 13 oxgangs of land in Lockton to the
Knights Templars. (fn. 140) Alan son of William Malcake of
Pickering petitioned for these lands in 1322, saying
that his grandfather William (whose heir he now was)
gave these 13 oxgangs to his son Roger in fee-tail, that
Roger had alienated them to the Templars, and that
on the suppression of the order they had been seized
by the Earl of Lancaster, whose lands the king now
held. (fn. 141) Alan apparently recovered these lands. He
left daughters Alice, Joan, and Margaret wife of
Thomas Pickering, to whom Lockton was assigned. (fn. 142)
Thomas and Margaret in 1334 established their
right to have a woodward in their demesne wood of
Lockton with other forest rights. (fn. 143) The Pickerings
of Oswaldkirk (q.v.) were still holding Lockton in
1509 (fn. 144) ; but in 1544 the 'Templars' lands' in
Lockton were granted to Stephen Holford, (fn. 145) who in
the same year conveyed them to Robert Metham. (fn. 146)
Robert was seised of the manor in 1553 (fn. 147) and died
seised in January 1566–7, leaving a son and heir
William, (fn. 148) who died in January 1590–1, leaving a
son and heir Charles. (fn. 149)
The manor was said in 1619–21 to belong to
'Sir Richard Etherington and others,' and Richard
Etherington was in possession in 1702. (fn. 150) Settlements
were made in 1777 of four-twelfths (fn. 151) and in 1807 of
a third of one twenty-fourth (fn. 152) of the manor. This
division of the manorial rights into fractional parts
suggests that they were already in the hands of the
freeholders.
Roger de Wrelton was accused in 1276 of having
sixteen years before appropriated chase within the
forest and without; the jury did not know by what
title. (fn. 153)
No mention of ROSEDALE (Russedale, Russendale, xii-xiii cent.; Rossedale, xiii–xiv cent.) is found
in the Domesday Book. It must, however, have
been in the king's hands together with Middleton and
Cropton, for these places afterwards formed part of
the honour of Rosedale. (fn. 154) The first lord of this fee
was Turgis Brundos, lord of Liddell, (fn. 155) who is styled
Turgis de Rosedale in a charter of about 1125. (fn. 156)
He died before 1130–1 (fn. 157) and was succeeded by
William his son, (fn. 158) founder of Rosedale Priory (fn. 159) for
nuns of the Cistercian order. Turgis son of William (fn. 160)
was living in 1164–5. (fn. 161) No further mention of this
family has been found, and in 1166–7 Aislaby and
Middleton were held by Baldwin Buelot. (fn. 162) Before
the close of the 12th century the fee was acquired
by the Stutevills, the lordship following the descent
of Cropton. (fn. 163)
King John confirmed to the nuns of Rosedale the
grant of William de Rosedale. (fn. 164) The nuns received
confirmation of the lands of Rosedale by Robert de
Stutevill, (fn. 165) successor of Turgis, (fn. 166) and continued in
possession until the Dissolution, after which, in 1538,
the reversion of the site of the priory, the manor and
the advowson of Rosedale Church were granted to
Ralph Earl of Westmorland in fee. (fn. 167) These then
descended with Kirkby Moorside (fn. 168) until the attainder
of Charles Earl of Westmorland in the Parliament of
1571, (fn. 169) when, for his services in suppressing the rebellion of that year, they were granted to Ambrose Earl
of Warwick in fee. (fn. 170) In 1576 the Earl of Warwick
resigned his grant. (fn. 171) The Crown then leased the
manor until 1605, (fn. 172) when it was granted to Prince
Charles in fee. (fn. 173) Charles I mortgaged it in 1626, (fn. 174)
and in 1629 settled it on the queen for life. (fn. 175) It was
retained by the Crown until the 19th century. (fn. 176) The
Rev. Dr. Penfold, in possession in 1836, was said to
have lately purchased it from the Crown. (fn. 177) In 1859
it was in the possession of Mr. H. B. Darley; it now
belongs to the trustees of the late Mr. Henry Darley
of Spaunton Lodge, Kirkby Moorside.
Gospatric had held a 'manor' and 1½ carucates at
WRELTON (Wereltun, xi cent.; Wherlton, 1316;
Warleton, 1405–6) before the Conquest; in 1086
Wrelton was in the king's hands. (fn. 178) It afterwards
belonged to the fee of Wake. (fn. 179) In 1284–5 and 1301–2
the heirs of Walter Boie (the Wreltons or Bulmers)
were under-tenants. (fn. 180) John son and heir of Alan de
Bulmer of Wrelton was in 1306 ordered to surrender
to Theophania widow of John de Bulmer of Bulmer
tenements in Wrelton. (fn. 181) Alan de Wrelton probably
enfeoffed William de Percehay, who paid the subsidy
in 1333–4, (fn. 182) when he granted him the forestership of
Lockton (q.v.). A manor of Wrelton now descended
with the manor of Levisham (q.v.) until 1573, (fn. 183) when
Henry Lord Compton granted it to Robert Gill, (fn. 184) who
died seised in March 1586–7, leaving a son and heir
Robert. (fn. 185) Thomas Gill and Mary his wife conveyed it
to Thomas and William Marshall early in 1612–13, (fn. 186)
Robert Gill conveyed it to John Woodward in the
spring of 1627–8, (fn. 187) and Thomas Gill and Mary with
Matthew Cowper and Ellis his wife conveyed it
to John Woodward in 1629. (fn. 188) George and Hugh
Woodward granted it in 1648 to Thomas Swale, (fn. 189)
who early in 1651–2 conveyed it to Samuel Marshall (fn. 190)
of Aislaby Grange. Samuel died in 1674, having
bequeathed his manor, dwelling-place and lands at
Wrelton to be divided equally between his eldest son
Samuel and eldest daughter Susan and their heirs. (fn. 191)
Samuel died before 1690, when Susan, a spinster,
mentions in her will the sale of her manor and
capital messuage in Wrelton to William Sawden. (fn. 192)
Mr. James Mitchelson Mitchelson is the present owner.
Lands in Wrelton, called a 'manor,' were appurtenant to the chantry of St. Nicholas in the church
of Sheriff Hutton. (fn. 193)
Churches
The church of ST. ANDREW
consists of a chancel 39 ft. 8 in. by
19 ft. 3 in., nave 41 ft. 6 in. by
19 ft. 3 in. with north aisle 10 ft. 6 in. wide and
south aisle 9 ft. wide, south porch, and western tower
11 ft. by 9 ft. 6 in.
The earliest portions of the existing fabric are the
lower stages of the west tower, which have all the
characteristics of 11th-century pre-Conquest work.
The earliest Norman work appears to date from about
1130, when the nave was rebuilt with an aisle upon
the north. Further considerable alterations were
made at the close of the same century, a south aisle
being added and the tower and chancel arches rebuilt.
At the same time the upper stage was added to the
tower. The chancel is the next work in point of
date, but of this only the north wall is now standing
and dates from the early 13th century. Towards the
end of the 13th century both the nave aisles were
completely rebuilt. Little further was done to the
church until the 15th century, when the nave clearstory was added. The church has been extensively
restored in modern times, the most important
alterations being the rebuilding of the east and south
chancel walls and the erection of the south porch.
The chancel with the exception of the north wall
is modern 'Decorated' work and has a five-light
traceried east window. The north wall is of the 13th
century and is pierced by a 13th-century lancet
about half-way along. The south wall, divided by
buttresses into three bays, has three modern two-light
windows and a priest's door. The wide and lofty
chancel arch dates from the end of the 12th century
and is pointed, of two chamfered orders, and springs
from responds, each having two circular side shafts
and a central shaft of bowtel form. The capitals are
moulded and have square abaci. The roof is modern.
The nave has a north arcade of three bays of early
12th-century date with plain semicircular arches
resting on cylindrical columns and half-round responds
with fluted capitals having square abaci and standing
on square plinths. The south arcade is half a century
later in date and has three semicircular arches of
two chamfered orders resting on round columns
with moulded capitals and 'hold-water' bases. The
responds are half columns and have good carved foliage
capitals of early form. The clearstory is lighted by
two-light 15th-century windows, and the roof, which
is of similar date, is low pitched with heavy tie-beams
and short king-posts.
The north aisle is entirely of 13th-century date
and has a stone bench run round the walls as far
east as the former altar platform. It is divided by
a buttress into two bays only, and below the window
sills is a double-chamfered string-course. The aisle
is lighted by three windows, one at either end and
one in the first bay of the north wall. They are
of two lights each with tracery of early form. The
north door has a trefoiled head of the same date.
The south aisle, though somewhat narrower than the
north, is of the same date and character. Here again
it is divided into two bays only. The east window
has modern tracery, but the opening is ancient. The
window in the first bay of the south wall is of two
trefoiled lights with an uncusped head light, and to
the east of it is a plain pointed piscina. The south
door is trefoiled like that on the north and has side
shafts. The door itself is of the 15th century with
traceried panelling, but the porch covering it is quite
modern, as is also the west window of this aisle. Cut
through the deep east respond on this side is a rebated
opening, probably of 15th-century date.
The junctions of the Saxon, Norman and 13thcentury work are distinctly visible on the outside of
the west wall on both
sides of the tower. The
tower arch of two orders
is of the same date and
character as the chancel
arch and the inner order
has a painted decoration
running round. The
lower stages of the tower
are of Saxon workmanship, the masonry having
very wide jointing with
'long and short' quoins,
some of the latter being
of large dimensions. The
west door has chamfered
imposts, a semicircular
arch and a projecting
strip of masonry carried
round as a frame, of the
common Saxon type. The
head is cut into by a
rough vesica-shaped window inserted about the
year 1200. The tower was heightened by the
addition of the bell-chamber about the same date, and
the latter is lighted by a two-light window in each face
and finished with an embattled parapet. It contains
four bells.
The fittings of the church include two 15th-century
oak stalls on either side of the quire. On the south
is one carved misericorde and the western stall has two
carved coats of arms: the one is fretty on a chief three
annulets, the other three roundels and a quarter. The
pulpit is a panelled work of the early 18th century
with an octagonal sounding-board surmounted by a
capping of ogee form. The church is particularly
rich in fragments of pre-Conquest sculpture. The
finest is the almost perfect cross now standing at the
east end of the north aisle. The faces are covered
with knotwork and four cylinders are inserted in the
'arm pits.' On the window-sill behind are two
fragments of Saxon work, one being a mutilated cross
head and the other a portion of a shaft with a
grotesquely carved bearded figure. Above the west
door of the tower outside is a square fragment bearing
knotwork and in the north tower wall outside is
another fragment of a shaft. Inside the tower at
the level of the second stage is a small but wellpreserved cross bearing a bound dragon in relief, only
recently discovered. Outside the tower is a stone
coffin and a slab bearing a cross in relief. (fn. 194)
The plate consists of a fluted cup and a modern set
of cup, paten and flagon.
The registers previous to 1812 are as follows: (i)
mixed entries 1671 to 1793, marriages to 1753 only;
(ii) a copy of the same period; (iii) marriages 1754
to 1802; (iv) baptisms 1792 to 1812; (v) burials
1792 to 1812; (vi) marriages 1802 to 1812.
The modern church of ST. GREGORY at Cropton,
built about 1840, stands on an ancient site and consists
of nave, sanctuary and north vestry. It is built in
the Norman style with a door on the south and a
three-sided apse at the east end. On the west gable
is a bellcote with two small bells. The font is
circular and plain and probably dates from the 12th
century.
The plate is modern.

Plan of Middleton Church
The registers are as follows: (i) baptisms and
burials 1771 to 1814; (ii) marriages 1754 to
1813.
South of the church is the base and part of the
shaft of a churchyard cross.
The church of ST. ANDREW at Lockton consists
of chancel 22 ft. 6 in. by 11 ft. 6 in., nave 43 ft. by
17 ft., south porch and west tower. The total length
is 74 ft. 6 in., all the measurements being internal.
The earliest portion of the church appears to be
a lancet window in the south chancel wall, which
appears to date from the early part of the 13th century. It is probable that the main walls of the nave
and chancel are also of this date, as the masonry of
small rubble is similar throughout, but there is
nothing else to definitely date the building. The
tower was added in the 15th century, when various
windows were inserted in the chancel and nave and
the chancel arch rebuilt. The east gable was rebuilt in
1723 and various windows have been subsequently
inserted and a south porch built.
The chancel has a very small three-light traceried
east window of the 15th century. In the north wall
is one modern window and at the eastern end of the
south wall is a single-light 15th-century window.
Further west is a priest's door of similar date, and
beyond it the 13th-century lancet mentioned above.
The gable coping at the east end is dated 1723 on
the southern kneeler. Internally the chancel walls are
plastered and whitewashed and the roof timbers are
cased in with match-boarding. The nave is lighted by
three large square-headed early 19th-century windows,
two in the south and one in the north wall. The
opening of the latter is partly ancient and above it is
a re-used 15th-century drip-stone. In the centre on
this side is a blocked 15th-century north door. The
south door is modern with a round head, and the
porch is an early 19th-century addition. The low
and narrow chancel arch dates from the 15th century.
The roof is match-boarded and the tie-beams cased
in like those of the chancel. The low tower arch is
recessed in four orders at the back, dying into the side
walls. The 15th-century tower is two stages high with
diagonal buttresses and finished with an embattled
parapet. The bell-chamber is lighted by a two-light
square-headed trefoiled window in each face, and
has a gabled roof running east and west covered with
stone slabs and set within the parapet. The tower
contains two bells, inaccessible except by ladder. The
church is built throughout with small rubble, the
nave having a slate roof and the chancel being tiled.
Of the fittings the font has a plain hemispherical
bowl and circular stem, probably of the 13th century;
the pulpit is Jacobean and of octagonal form with
conventional flowers on the panels and a running
design of chip carving on the framework. The
communion rails have 17th-century turned balusters
and the reading desk is made up of old pewing of
the same date. A 17th-century chair is also preserved.
The plate includes a pewter flagon and a paten,
also pewter, inscribed 'Lockton.'
The registers previous to 1812 are as follows:
(i) mixed entries 1713 to 1812; (ii) marriages 1754
to 1812.
The church of ST. MARY AND ST. LAURENCE,
Rosedale, consists of a chancel and nave in one range,
measuring together internally 58 ft. by 27 ft., and a
small south vestry.
The present building was erected in 1839 on the
site of the quire of the church of a Cistercian nunnery.
It was much restored in 1894 and is lighted on the east
by three grouped lancet lights. There are six long
lancet lights on each side of the nave and between the
westernmost pairs are pointed doors; there is a third
door at the west. The church has a plain opentimber roof with king-post trusses, and there is a
west gallery.
All the fittings are modern with the exception
of the carved oak lectern, which is of 18th-century
date. Over the north door is a stone inscribed
'omnia vanitas' in crude Gothic lettering. Near
this door is a defaced coffin slab with an incised cross
and the remains of an inscription in Gothic capitals.
Lying outside the west wall are two trefoiled heads,
apparently the remains of some form of canopy of
late 13th-century date, and a stone sedile. Over the
west wall is a small bell-gable containing one bell,
apparently of 18th-century date.
The plate consists of a silver cup and cover and a
plated metal salver and flagon. The cup is inscribed
'Capella de Rosedale 1635' and bears the maker's
mark I.P. for James Plummer of York. The plated
vessels bear no dates.
About twenty yards west of the present church are
the remains of the north-west angle of the north
transept of the monastic church. This is built of
ashlar and has a moulded plinth and buttresses of
slight projection to the north and west. The remains
are some 20 ft. in height and contain a vice entered
from a door with a shouldered head built in the
wall, which is splayed across the internal angle. A
second door is placed about 10 ft. above the ground
level. The whole structure is of 13th-century date.
Advowson
The advowson of Middleton
Church was appurtenant to the manor
until 1455, (fn. 195) when the co-heirs of
Edmund Earl of Kent obtained leave to grant it to
the Abbot of Kirkstall. (fn. 196) A vicarage was ordained
in 1456. (fn. 197) Among the leases of the advowson after
the Dissolution (fn. 198) was one made in August 1585 to
Martin Frobisher of the reversion of the rectory and
church in 1606, for thirty years, for 'his good and
acceptable service,' (fn. 199) a reward he did not live to
enjoy. James Colcott presented in 1627 and 1632. (fn. 200)
In 1666 Robert and William Skelton and others conveyed the rectory and advowson to Thomas Skelton. (fn. 201)
Samuel Skelton, a minor in the guardianship of his
mother Alice, was owner in 1676 (fn. 202) and presented in
1683. (fn. 203) He and Sarah his wife conveyed it to Luke
Robinson early in 1689–90. (fn. 204) Thomas Robinson presented from 1701 to 1716 and the advowson followed
the descent of the manor of Welburn, (fn. 205) being in the
possession of the Rev. Francis Wrangham, the Rev.
Arthur Cayley and T. Smith in 1824. (fn. 206) In 1830
the Archbishop of York presented (fn. 207) and is still patron.
The chantry of our Lady in the church in 1547
was of no foundation, but was to aid the performance
of service. (fn. 208) The revenues of the Lady Gild in the
parish church were applied to a grammar school. (fn. 209)
The chapels of Cropton and of St. Giles (mentioned in the early 13th century) (fn. 210) at Lockton belonged
to the church of Middleton. (fn. 211) Cropton is now a
chapelry, Lockton a chapelry styled a vicarage, united
to the vicarage of Middleton. In 1566–7 it was
said that marriages, burials and baptisms had been celebrated at Lockton chapel, which was in reasonable
repair, time out of mind. Cropton chapel was then
very small with only a slate roof. (fn. 212) The chapels
were in 1608 granted in fee by the Crown to Sir
Robert Wright, kt., and Robert Wright, gent. (fn. 213)
In 1311 the Prioress of Rosedale obtained leave to
appropriate her church of Rosedale. (fn. 214) The church
descended with the manor of Rosedale (fn. 215) (q.v.) until
that was alienated by the Crown in the 19th century. It is in the gift of the Lord Chancellor. The
advowson of the priory followed the descent of the
manor of Kirkby Moorside (fn. 216) (q.v.).
Charities
The Poor's Land consists of an
acre of land at Wrelton let at £3 a
year, which is distributed among the
poor of Middleton, Aislaby and Wrelton, £1 to each
township.
The school erected in 1844 receives £8 6s. 8d. a
year from the charity of John Stockton. (fn. 217)
In 1868 John Mercer, by will proved 1 July, left
£100 for the schoolmaster at Lockton. The legacy
was invested in £102 0s. 9d. India 3½ per cent.
annuities with the official trustees.
In 1892 Mary Ann Letitia Watson, by will proved
28 September, bequeathed £100, the income to be
applied by the vicar and churchwardens for the
benefit of the poor. The legacy was invested in
£99 14s. 5d. consols with the official trustees.
The Wesleyan Methodist chapel at Saltergate in this
parish, comprised in an indenture dated 31 December
1869, was by a scheme of the Charity Commissioners
dated 30 November 1906 authorized to be let to the
county council of the North Riding, as the local
education authority, at a yearly rent of £2 10s.,
with the reservation with the trustees of the exclusive
use of the premises on Saturdays and Sundays and on
two other evenings in the week.
Township of Aislaby—In 1892 Mary Ann Letitia
Watson, by will proved 28 September, bequeathed
£100, the income to be applied in purchasing literature for the library. The legacy was invested in
£99 14s. 5d. consols.
In 1902 Mary Ann Thompson, by a will proved
1 August, left £150 for a library and reading room at
Aislaby. The legacy was invested in £166 14s. 1d.
consols. The two sums of stock are held by the
official trustees. The dividends, amounting together
to £6 12s. 8d., are duly applied.
For charity of Thomas Mather for education see
under township of Cropton.
Township of Cropton.—The Charity Land, known
as Hobson's charity, consists of five closes of land in
Cropton and part of a close in Wrelton, containing
together about 11 acres, let to various tenants at £12 14s.
a year, and about 4 acres of moorland unproductive of
income, except that derived from sporting rights. The
official trustees also hold £43 9s. 8d. representing poor's
money and sale of timber.
By a scheme of the Charity Commissioners of
12 December 1890 the legal estate was vested in
the official trustee of charity lands, the overseers of
the poor were appointed ex officio trustees, together
with three co-optative trustees, and the net income was
directed to be applied for the general benefit of the
poor in such way as the trustees should consider most
conducive to the formation of provident habits.
The school, the date of foundation of which is not
stated, is endowed with 20 acres, or thereabouts, let at
£20 a year.
In 1851 Thomas Mather, by codicil to his will
proved at York 7 October, bequeathed a sum of
£333 6s. 8d. consols with the official trustees for the
advancement of the education of poor children resident
in the townships of Cropton and Aislaby. The charity
is regulated by scheme of the Charity Commissioners
13 February 1900, whereby the annual dividends,
amounting to £8 6s. 8d., are made applicable in prizes
and payments to public elementary school children in
the said townships.
For John Skelton's charity see under township
of Wrelton.
Township of Wrelton.—In 1720 William Lownesbrough left 5s. a year for bread to be distributed to
the poor in Middleton Church at Easter and Christmas.
The payment is duly made.
The National school receives £8 6s. 8d. a year
from the charity of John Stockton. (fn. 218)
In 1886 John Skelton, by will proved at Oxford
30 November, bequeathed £1,000, represented by
£987 4s. 10d. consols with the official trustees, the
income to be distributed at Christmas for benefit of
poor persons resident in Wrelton and Cropton. The
dividends, amounting to £24 13s. 6d., are distributed
in sums varying from 5s. to £1 and in gifts to sick
persons.
Chapelry of Rosedale Eastside.—The school is
endowed with £5 a year, charged by will of Thomas
Pierson, 1720, as to £2, part thereof, out of lands in
Bransdale, and as to £3, the other part thereof, out
of lands on the west side of Rosedale.
The Rosedale Abbey Primitive Methodist chapel
and school and Rosedale Ebenezer Primitive Methodist chapel, founded by deed of 1863 and Memorandum of 1886, are regulated by scheme of the
Charity Commissioners 1889.